The husband can only give what he owned. His interest in the real estate depends on how he and his wife held title to the real estate and whether he was legally divorced. If he and his wife owned the property as joint tenants with the right of survivorship then she became the sole owner when he died. If they owned as tenants in common then she still owns her half and he could only devise his half to you. The estate must be probated in order for title to real estate to pass legally to the heirs.
You need to consult with an attorney in your area who specializes in real estate and probate law and who can review the title and determine who owns the property.
Yes
yes
Bob Dylan
He passes away in 2001.
yes
Everything passes and this will pass
Some dude and his girlfriend are being haunted by a demon. At the end the demon posseses the girl and kills her boyfriend. In the 2nd one the demon haunts the girls sister because it wants her new born baby. At the end her husband passes the demon onto the girlfriend and boyfriend from the first one. The possessed girlfriend kills her sister and her husband and takes the baby. The 3rd one goes back to 1988 when the sisters were little and tells why the demon haunts them. At the end we find out that their grandmother was part of a satanic cult that sacrificed new born babies to demons and the demon kills their mom and her boyfriend.
Considering they weren't married...I doubt she does, but possibly because of how long.
When a husband passes away, HE is a deceased spouse. I think you may be looking for these words:A woman whose husband passed away is a widow.A man whose wife passed away is a widower.If the surviving spouse remarries, he or she is no longer a widower/widow.
Depending on the type of benefit it usually stops when he passes.
the oldest next of kin has all the rights to possess what ever they owned including ashes
well i guess you just go to their conserts and not be like all over them just be normal and yourself and get backstage passes